Wettbewerbe für Architekten und Ingenieure, Landschaftsarchitekten, Architektur Studenten Wettbewerbe für Architekten und Ingenieure, Landschaftsarchitekten, Architektur Studenten
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TIMBER IN THE CITY 4: Urban Habitats Competition , Atlanta/ Vereinigte Staaten

Architektur Wettbewerbs-Ergebnis

wa-ID
wa-2032187
Tag der Veröffentlichung
14.07.2021
Aktualisiert am
26.10.2022
Verfahrensart
Studentenwettbewerb
Zulassungsbereich
Andere
Beteiligung
600 Arbeiten
Auslober
Bewerbungsschluss
13.04.2022
Abgabetermin
01.06.2022
Bekanntgabe
09.09.2022

1. Preis

Project: Pine Hill
Students: Peter Koczarski & ZhongMing Peter Zhang
Faculty Sponsor: Caroline Grieco
Institution: New Jersey Institute of Technology

2. Preis

Project: Spatial/Material Speculations: Timber
Student: Ahmed Helal
Faculty Sponsor: Viren Brahmbhatt
Institution: City College of New York

3. Preis

Project: Hydro Habitat
Students: Evan Craig & Tiffany Velin
Faculty Sponsor: Suzan Wines
Institution: City College of New York

Honorable Mention

Project: Foster Atlanta
Student: Sophia Rodriguez
Faculty Sponsor: Michael Hill
Institution: Savannah College of Art and Design
Collaborator: Matt Barnett, LS3P

Honorable Mention

Project: Timber Arts
Students: Madeline Esdale, William Evans & Jeremy Tringale
Faculty Sponsors: Tyler Hinckley & Jacob Werner
Institution: Boston Architectural College

Honorable Mention

Project: Breathing Timber City
Student: Miguel Lantigua Inoa
Faculty Sponsor: Elizabeth Whittaker
Institution: Harvard University

Honorable Mention

Project: Diffusion: Revealing the Forest Within
Students: Maggie Kroening & Connor Schwartz
Faculty Sponsor: Shawn Protz
Institution: North Carolina State University

Honorable Mention

Project: Oasis in the City
Students: Mingyao Chen, Mosammet Chowdhury & Otabek Ochilov
Faculty Sponsor: Suzan Wines
Institution: City College of New York
Wettbewerbsaufgabe
Die Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) freut sich, den Wettbewerb TIMBER IN THE CITY 4: Urban Habitats für das Studienjahr 2021-2022 auszuschreiben. Der Wettbewerb ist eine Partnerschaft zwischen dem Softwood Lumber Board (SLB), ACSA und dem Kendeda Building for Innovative Sustainable Design am Georgia Institute of Technology. Das Programm soll Studenten dazu anregen, sich einzeln oder in Teams vorzustellen, wie unsere bestehenden Städte durch nachhaltige Gebäude aus erneuerbaren Ressourcen umgestaltet werden können, die eine sinnvolle und erschwingliche Bauweise bieten, neue und traditionelle Holzmaterialien innovativ einsetzen und gesunde Lebens- und Arbeitsumgebungen gestalten. Dies ist der vierte Wettbewerb in der Reihe TIMBER IN THE CITY und konzentriert sich in diesem Jahr auf die Wechselbeziehung zwischen Wohnen, städtischer Verkehrsinfrastruktur, gerechtem Leben und Klimawandel.

Unter Einbeziehung neuer struktureller und ökologischer Möglichkeiten des Holzbaus werden die Teilnehmer einen mittelhohen, gemischt genutzten Komplex entwerfen, der erschwinglichen Wohnraum, eine große kommunale Wellness-Einrichtung und ein Zentrum für frühkindliche Bildung umfasst, die alle mit einem neuen öffentlichen Außenbereich am Wasser verbunden sind. Die Teilnehmer sind aufgefordert, Konstruktionssysteme in Szenarien vorzuschlagen, die die Leistungsmerkmale nicht nur einer, sondern einer Vielzahl von Holztechnologien optimal nutzen, und sie werden ermutigt, den Standort als Testgelände für sozial, materiell und ökologisch fortschrittliche und innovative Modelle des nachhaltigen städtischen Lebens zu betrachten.

Die Programme für diese gemischt genutzte Siedlung sollen Studenten und Pädagogen dazu anregen, kreativ und kritisch über die Art und Weise nachzudenken, in der die Wahl von Baumaterialien und die Wechselbeziehung zwischen Innenraum und Außenbereich langfristige Auswirkungen auf die Gesundheit der städtischen Umwelt haben. Der Wohnungsbau ist die größte Komponente des Wettbewerbsprogramms und bietet die Möglichkeit, die effektive Verwendung von Holzkonstruktionen bei der Schaffung von Gebäuden mit kleineren zellulären Einheiten zu untersuchen. Eine gemeinschaftliche Wellness- und Sporteinrichtung ergänzt den Wohnungsbau und bietet größere gemeinschaftliche und kollektive Räume, die größere strukturelle Spannweiten erfordern werden. Eine Kindertagesstätte für Kinder im Alter von 6 Wochen bis 5 Jahren macht auf die entscheidende Rolle aufmerksam, die diese Einrichtungen für die langfristige Vitalität und Entwicklung einer Gemeinde spielen.

Diese vierte Ausgabe von Timber in the City befasst sich mit dem Midtown Atlanta Arts Center, das sich in Atlantas Heart of the Arts befindet, das für seine hohe Dichte an Kunstgalerien, Museen, Theatern und historischen Gebäuden bekannt ist und in der Nähe der Georgia Tech, des Kendeda Building for Innovative Sustainable Design (das erste Living Building Challenge-zertifizierte Gebäude im Süden), des Innovations- und Technologiebezirks sowie des Campus des Savannah College of Art and Design Atlanta liegt. Als das U-Bahn-System in den 1970er Jahren gebaut wurde, wurden die Bahnhöfe, um sie gut sichtbar und zugänglich zu machen, als Einzweckbauten auf heute sehr wertvollem Grund und Boden errichtet. Die Einzweckbauten in Midtown Atlanta sind heute weder wirtschaftlich noch gesellschaftlich relevant.

Competition assignment
The Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) is pleased to announce TIMBER IN THE CITY 4: Urban Habitats Competition for the 2021-2022 academic year. The competition is a partnership between the Softwood Lumber Board (SLB), ACSA and the Kendeda Building for Innovative Sustainable Design at the Georgia Institute of Technology. The program is intended to engage students, working individually or in teams, to imagine the transformation of our existing cities through sustainable buildings from renewable resources, offering expedient affordable construction, innovating with new and traditional wooden materials, and designing healthy living and working environments. This is the fourth competition in this TIMBER IN THE CITY series, and focuses this year on the interrelationship between housing, urban transit infrastructure, equitable living, and climate change.

Embracing new structural and ecological possibilities of wood construction, entrants will design a mid-rise, mixed-use complex that includes affordable housing, a large community wellness facility, and an early childhood education center, all interlaced with a new exterior public waterfront space. Entrants are challenged to propose construction systems in scenarios that draw optimally on the performance characteristics of not one but a variety of wood technologies and are encouraged to think about the site as a testing ground for socially, materially, and environmentally progressive and innovative models of sustainable urban living.

The programs for this mixed-use development are composed to challenge students and educators to think creatively and critically about the way in which choices about building materials, and the interrelationship of interior space and the exterior environments frame long- term consequences for the health of urban environments. Housing is the largest component of the competition program and presents an opportunity to look closely at the way timber construction can be used effectively in creating buildings based on smaller cellular units. A community wellness and sports facility complements the housing, and offers larger community and collective spaces that will require larger structural spans. An early childhood education center, for children from 6 weeks to 5 years old, calls attention to the critical role these institutions play in the long-term vitality and development of a community.

This fourth edition of the Timber in the City considers a site, the midtown Atlanta Arts Center, located in Atlanta’s Heart of the Arts, known for its dense number of art galleries, museums, theaters, historic buildings, and the proximity to Georgia Tech, the Kendeda Building for Innovative Sustainable Design (the first Living Building Challenge-certified structure in the South), the Innovation and Technology district as well as Savannah College of Art and Design Atlanta campus. When the metro system was built in the 1970’s, to make the stations highly visible and accessible, they were constructed as single use structures, on what is now very valuable real estate. Single-use structures in Midtown Atlanta are now longer economically or socially relevant.

Jury
Arash Adel, University of Michigan
Katie MacDonald, University of Virginia
Lindsey Wikstrom, Mattaforma
Michael Gamble, Georgia Institute of Technology
Omar Al-Hassawi, Washington State University

Weitere Informationen zu den Gewinnern finden Sie unter /
More information about the winners can be found at:

www.acsa-arch.org/competitions/2022-timber-competition/winners
TIMBER IN THE CITY 4: Urban Habitats Competition
 
Organisers
Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA)
 
Introduction
The Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) is pleased to announce TIMBER IN THE CITY 4: Urban Habitats Competition for the 2021-2022 academic year. The competition is a partnership between the Softwood Lumber Board (SLB), ACSA and the Kendeda Building for Innovative Sustainable Design at the Georgia Institute of Technology. The program is intended to engage students, working individually or in teams, to imagine the transformation of our existing cities through sustainable buildings from renewable resources, offering expedient affordable construction, innovating with new and traditional wooden materials, and designing healthy living and working environments. This is the fourth competition in this TIMBER IN THE CITY series, and focuses this year on the interrelationship between housing, urban transit infrastructure, equitable living, and climate change.
 
The Challenge
Embracing new structural and ecological possibilities of wood construction, entrants will design a mid-rise, mixed-use complex that includes affordable housing, a large community wellness facility, and an early childhood education center, all interlaced with a new exterior public waterfront space. Entrants are challenged to propose construction systems in scenarios that draw optimally on the performance characteristics of not one but a variety of wood technologies and are encouraged to think about the site as a testing ground for socially, materially, and environmentally progressive and innovative models of sustainable urban living.
 
The programs for this mixed-use development are composed to challenge students and educators to think creatively and critically about the way in which choices about building materials, and the interrelationship of interior space and the exterior environments frame long- term consequences for the health of urban environments. Housing is the largest component of the competition program and presents an opportunity to look closely at the way timber construction can be used effectively in creating buildings based on smaller cellular units. A community wellness and sports facility complements the housing, and offers larger community and collective spaces that will require larger structural spans. An early childhood education center, for children from 6 weeks to 5 years old, calls attention to the critical role these institutions play in the long-term vitality and development of a community.
 
This fourth edition of the Timber in the City considers a site, the midtown Atlanta Arts Center, located in Atlanta’s Heart of the Arts, known for its dense number of art galleries, museums, theaters, historic buildings, and the proximity to Georgia Tech, the Kendeda Building for Innovative Sustainable Design (the first Living Building Challenge-certified structure in the South), the Innovation and Technology district as well as Savannah College of Art and Design Atlanta campus. When the metro system was built in the 1970’s, to make the stations highly visible and accessible, they were constructed as single use structures, on what is now very valuable real estate. Single-use structures in Midtown Atlanta are now longer economically or socially relevant.
 
Eligibility
Because the support of SLB is largely derived from companies whose markets are mainly in the U.S., the Timber in the City Student Competition is open to students and/or student teams from ACSA Full and Candidate Member Schools, as well as ACSA Affiliate Members Schools from the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.
 
Schedule
Registration Deadline: April 13, 2022
Submission Deadline: June 1, 2022
Jury Convenes: Summer 2022
Winners Announced: Summer 2022
 
Awards
Winning students and their faculty sponsors will receive cash prizes totaling $40,000 USD. The design jury will meet in the summer of 2022 to select winning projects and honorable mentions. Winners and their faculty sponsors will be notified of the competition results directly. A list of winning projects will be posted on the ACSA website (www.acsa-arch.org).
 
First Prize: Student $10,000 / Faculty Sponsor $7,000
Second Prize: Student $8,000 / Faculty Sponsor $5,000
Third Prize: Student $6,000 / Faculty Sponsor $4,000
 
More information and details at

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